The Republican Un-Civil War – The Neocons and the Tea Party Fight for Control of the GOP

This election is not about Obama-Romney as much as it is about the very uncivil Civil War being conducted in the Republican Party, where one of its two factions is culminating a 35 year party coup that will reshape American politics forever. Even though the Republicans may seem, particularly to Liberals, like one unified front, they have been anything but.

As we noted earlier this year, the Republican Party is deeply divided between old-school Reagan Neocons, the Karl Rove faction whose standard bearers include Mr. Romney, and the 19th century-revisionist, extremist John Bircher Libertarians of Grover Norquist, the Koch brothers,et al who control the money that funds the Tea Party.

We saw those divisions emerge as the Neocons’ candidates, Mr. Romney and Mr. Gingrich, were slammed hard by big money tossed primarily at Rick Santorum. Romney struggled to clinch the nomination because changes in campaign spending rules allowed Tea Party backers like the Kochs and Foster Friess to stick monkey wrenches into the nominating process, just as they’ve been tampering with the Congress and state houses around the nation.

The GOP is a political party that registers barely 2 in 10 Americans, yet billions from a handful of Citizens United donors, the richest handful of the 1%, will have a significant impact on this election. Not on the presidential race as much as the local races for the state and federal legislatures.

It is common, particularly for the TV talking heads, to lump both groups into one GOP whole. Frequently as they rant on to the host, though, you can still pick up the distinct agendas of the two camps.

What makes Neocons and The John Birch-backed Tea Party different? NeoCons are not anti-big government. They like big government, particularly when it:

Privatizes. From schools to prisons to hospitals to roads and tunnels big corporations, with shrinking profit centers for exporting goods, Neocons try to cannibalize government functions that bring in billions by privatizing them, with little broader public interest in the common good. It has yielded no net public gain. In many cases, privatization has been a societal negative.

Protects loose regulations for friends on Wall Street and Big Oil, but not too loose. Many GOP supporters make money off of clean air and clean water legislation selling industry the insurance and the tools to clean up;

Provides revenue for companies that do business with the federal government, particularly in military-defense establishment, construction companies that make money from infrastructure improvements like roads, bridges, tunnels and schools;

Keeps America a politically manipulative, militarily-backed arm of American super-corporates;

Keeps the Bush Tax cuts in place for the very wealthy. There is more wiggle room exists in Neocon position on this subject, if freed from the Tea Party’s orthodoxy, as most of the neocons can read the numbers from places like the independent Center on Budget and Policy Priorities that show their ambitions in terms of both domestic and foreign interventionist agenda rely on that capital.

By contrast the John Birch strain of Libertarians and their puppet show, the Tea Partyhate government, and engage in its destruction from within. They differ from Ron Paul Libertarians in that Paul’s broader populist utopianism doesn’t appeal to them.

Birchers don’t seek the government off of the back of all citizens, just the anointed few of the 1%. Bircher Libertarians want a government with no fiscal controls and low taxation, but with extreme social controls of the population to keep parts of society with whom they either disagree or those that they find distasteful under control and unequal. It is their agenda that has driven so many into the Independent column politically.

The John Birch Libertarians/Tea Party seek:

To return America to the pre-Great Depression, robber-baron industrial age. The return of 19th Century laissez-faire capitalism. What’s that? A pre-Herbert Hoover America, free of all regulation on industry, and on the very wealthy, to do as they see fit for their own personal benefit;

To turn America into their Theocracy – An extremist, narrow, largely protestant religious world-order dominant over every other religious faith or philosophy. The Founding Fathers were leery of putting God into the political realm, particularly in the early colonies when there were so many faiths and sects. Tea Party candidates frequently inject inaccurate blending of their religious and political views, God’s political warriors. Extremist poli-religious groups like the Family that include congressmen, senators, and high-ranking members of the military align with the Bircher Libertarians. This is probably the most dangerous aspect of this GOP sect.

To foster extreme control of minorities and immigrants. Xenophobia and racist dominionism drive their desire for a traditional White America with containment of the growing tide of minorities and immigrants that it fears. Some of the larger donor families have histories of encouraging eugenics, which ranges from the forced sterilization of poor women and men, to the most extreme extermination programs of the Nazis, who took great interest in American eugenics programs in their day. Programs funded by the same 1% families now attempting to take over the GOP and dismantle the U.S. Government.

Anti- Feminist – The Birchers and the Tea Party have spent a great deal of their time in vaginas and uteruses. While jobs legislation sits on the sideline, they have lobbed hundreds of invasive anti-women pieces of legislation, ranging from attacks on birth control and reproductive rights in general to the ability of women to seek fair compensation in the workplace.

No unions, or restrictions on setting wages for private or public enterprise. No voice for those who labor to collectively bargain, or to fight workplace rules that disadvantage them or endanger their safety;

Rubber Stamp Government – Politicians of low intellect and high social and religious dogma who follow orders well on fiscal issues beyond their comprehension, and who will be the standard bearers and warriors for absolutist, unyielding positions handed to them by the 1% via ALEC and the GOP high command that are, by definition, fascism. [See: The Rubber Stamp President];

Taxes The preservation of the Bush Tax cuts in place for the very wealthy, even when fiscally conservative organizations point out the unsustainability of their tax policy. Their viewpoint is that they are not responsible for the ills of the poor. [4];

Elimination of the Social Safety Net – They espouse the complete dismantling of Medicare, Medicaid, and all other state-run welfare systems. They want to balance the federal budget with the elimination of assistance to those more in need. Cutting off government-backed aid forces the very poor back into the hands of their theocracy as churches would be the only last resort for millions.

Fascism – They seek to end compromise, the glue that has kept the country together politically since its founding, in favor of their unilateral, dogmatic absolutism, with no compromise with those with different principles and beliefs than their own. John Bircher Libertarians and their minions, like Ann Coulter, talk about people with opposing points of view as sub-humans, or those unworthy of living. Their political views often border hate speech, racism and fascism.

What would have been passed off in Ronald Reagan’s time as lunatic fringe nonsense is now mainstream Republican Party dogma. Ronald Reagan, whose name is oft-invoked by the Tea Party, could never run for President under the draconian standards which they set.

Grover Norquist signalled to those willing to listen in a barely watched CSPAN-covered speech that the White House is more of a figure-head office in the hard-Right new world order. The keys to the castle lie with Congress.

Norquist’s Teahadis, aided by powerful wealthy groups like the Club for Growth, have hunted “RINO” (Republican in Name Only) moderates out of the party over the last few decades. Today that endangered species is on the border of extinction.

The hunting ground has shifted from the House to the Senate. Senator Dick Lugar of Indiana was a more prominent recent casualty of groups that have purged the party of moderates. NeoCons who won’t vote in absolutist terms to bring down the government, or at least state publicly that they back the radical Right, find themselves with primary opponents from the Tea Party.

The recent bludgeoning of David Dewhurst by Teahadi Ted Cruz in Texas’ Republican primaries in 2012 is another troubling sign that the Norquist’s Libertarian faction has its sights set on seating Teahadis in the Senate as well.

Karl Rove is the Neocon’s General Custer. He’s making his last stand with his American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS funds. Their stated aim is to take on Mr. Obama, and they do try to off-set Democratic seats with Republican ones, but they are primarily waging war with the Norquist’s John Bircher Libertarians to prop up dozens of neocon-schooled Republican regulars.

Who’s winning? The Tea Party owns the House, and more than 20 state houses. Speaker Boehner, a Neocon, is unable to keep them in line. They now have their eye on the big prize: The United States Senate.

Right now, the only thing that prevents the Senate from grinding to a halt is that the Democrats hold a slim majority. The Senate, built by those patrician Founding Fathers, was supposed to be the bastion of calm and sober deliberation of policies and laws, the back-stop to filter the popularly-elected House’s heated passions and possible take-overs like the one we are witnessing now by a powerful few manipulating an ill-informed electorate.

Today both bodies of Congress are popularly elected. Norquist and his allies are looking to unseat more moderate Neocon senators, and replace them with more of the same monkey wrench Teahadis who have turned the House into a born-again farce.

Senators wield great power in the body. One or two, via the rules of the Senate game, can hold up legislation indefinitely. They can threaten a filibuster, and stop up the works for days, weeks, or permanently.

Senator Jim Demint, who has been slush funding the Tea Party and turning as many Neocons in the House and Senate into Teahadis, eyes Neocon Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s job.

Tea Party senators are not immune from their own, either. Marco Rubio, the Florida firebrand, a Teahadi darling, was raised into the cross-hairs of the Club for Growth when he suggested that there was a place for government in American life and that there was a need for some level of social safety net. [5]

If the Tea Party is able to put a few more of its regulars into Senate seats, the kind of gridlock that we saw in 2011, particularly around issues like taxes on the 1% and the phony debate on the debt ceiling, will look like a garden party.

A minority of a minority will be able to hold the United States Government, and our much valued credit rating, hostage in exchange for the most radical fascist restructuring of this country in its history.

This is far more than a simple shift of power. The changes being wrought by the Libertarian Birchers are disenfranchisement on a monumental scale.

Great article. I’m an Obama supporter and I would share it with my Rep. chat friends if it was fair. I know what “spin” is. Insulting, accusing ranting like a homeless minister. And you’re so correct. Don’t sell it so hard. Please. Like the positive tone in the bullet headings and the negative tone in the other set. Shameless.
Very passionate. Love it.

The author has a nice little John Birch Society-Americans for Prosperity (translated David Koch) Tea Party conspircy theory going here. The only problem is that he obviously does not know what is the Tea Party. For a litle edification, read Ronald Libby’s “Purging the Republican Party: Tea Party Campaigns and Elections.”

Then obviously the Tea Party hasn’t been informed of this either, because their elected officials which they endorse are squarely in the hip pocket of the Dead Billionaires Club, and there isn’t an enlightened thinker to be found amongst those politicos.

The Tea Party is a populist, grassroots movement sweeping the country. It is comprised of thousands of local Tea Party groups. I am sure that there are a number of such groups where you live and work. They are quite active in the social media. I suggest you attend one of their meetings to learn about them. Then you may appreciate what they stand for and what they actually do. Otherwise, you have no credibility on the subject.

Been there. Seen them. I have lots of credibility on the subject. Most of y’all don’t do near as much homework as to who funds your “populist, grassroots movement.” The movement is poorly educated as to the parts of government that are beneficial, and which are not, and are easily led astray by the millions in propaganda that the Libertarian right use to pull your strings. Like most good turkeys, you won’t see what they’re using you for until you’re hanging in the chute bleeding out. The Kochs, Coors, DeVos et al are not your friends. They get y’all to vote against your own self interest, obscure what government does in these quaint “checkbook balancing” arguments (The difference being that you can’t print money in your basement, but Uncle Sam can). You might spend some time reading up here on the funders. You may agree with them, or you might find that that warm, fuzzy feeling that wool gives you isn’t quite as nice when it’s being pulled over your eyes.

About Truth-2-Power

A phrase coined by the Quakers during in the mid-1950's, "Speak truth to power," was a call for the United States to stand firm against fascism and other forms of totalitarianism; it is a phrase that seems to unnerve political right, with reason.
The Founding Fathers of United States risked their lives in order to speak truth to the power of King George and the mighty British Empire. It was and is considered courageous.
Join us!